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Foundations of the Neuron Doctrine: 25th Anniversary Edition 2nd Revised edition [Kietas viršelis]

(MD, DPhil, Yale University)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 384 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 163x236x28 mm, weight: 782 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Dec-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190259388
  • ISBN-13: 9780190259389
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 384 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 163x236x28 mm, weight: 782 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Dec-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190259388
  • ISBN-13: 9780190259389
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The neuron doctrine, first formulated in 1891, states that the brain is constructed of individual neurons, organized into functioning circuits that mediate behavior. It is the fundamental principal that underlies all of neuroscience and clinical neurology.Foundations of the Neuron Doctrine gives an authoritative account of how this theory was the product of an explosion of histological studies and vigorous debates near the end of the nineteenth century by an extraordinary group of scientists, led by Santiago Ramon y Cajal of Spain, using a selective stain discovered by Camillo Golgi of Italy.
They were the first to describe the distinctive branching patterns of nerve cells, providing evidence that the cells interact as individual units to form circuits, opposed however by Golgi, who held out for a view that the nerve cells form syncytial networks. Studies in the 1950s appeared to confirm the nerve cell as an individual unit, as embodied in the neuron doctrine, which became the basis for the rise of concepts of normal and disordered neural function since then.
This 25th Anniversary Edition is timely. Recent studies are showing a much greater degree of complexity in neuronal organization, so that the debate of neuron versus network is again coming to the fore in neuroscience research. Unique to this Anniversary Edition is the inclusion of commentaries by distinguished international leaders - Marina Bentivoglio, Xavier De Felipe, Sten Grillner, Paolo Mazzarello, Larry Swanson, and Rafael Yuste - on the continuing relevance of the neuron doctrine for modern studies of the brain at all levels, from genes and molecules to microcircuits, neural networks, and behavior. As this new wave of modern studies expands our concepts of nervous function as the basis of behavior, Foundations of the Neuron Doctrine will be a unique source providing conceptual continuity from classical times to the present and into the future.

With commentaries from

Marina Bentivoglio
Paolo Mazzarello
Javier DeFelipe
Larry Swanson
Sten Grillner
Rafael Yuste
Preface to the 25th Anniversary Edition ix
Preface to the Original Publication xiii
Commentaries on the "Neuron Doctrine" xvii
Cajal, Golgi, and Ariadne's Thread--Marina Bentivoglio xvii
Reflections on the Neuron Doctrine--Javier DeFelipe xx
The Neuron Doctrine Revisited: A Personal Account---Sten Grillner xxiv
Camillo Golgi, Foundations of the Neuron Doctrine, and the History of Neuroscience---Paolo Mazzarello xxviii
Some Reflections on the Neuron Doctrine---Larry Swanson xxxi
Back to Golgi? Neural Networks as a New Paradigm for Brain Circuits---Rafael Yuste xxxiii
1 Introduction
1(8)
2 From the Beginnings to the Cell Theory
9(10)
3 Do Nerve Cells Belong in the Cell Theory?
19(14)
4 Nerve Cells or Nerve Nets?
33(10)
5 Kolliker Gives In
43(8)
6 Support Builds for Networks
51(14)
7 The Nerve Cell Studies of Freud
65(12)
8 The Revolutionary Method of Golgi
77(24)
9 A Neuron Theory Begins to Take Form: His, Forel, Nansen
101(26)
10 Ramon y Cajal: The Shock of Recognition
127(12)
11 The Early Discoveries of Cajal
139(16)
12 The Laws of Cajal
155(12)
13 Joining the Mainstream
167(12)
14 The Neuron Doctrine
179(20)
15 The Law of Dynamic Polarization
199(18)
16 Controversy
217(14)
17 The Synapse and the Growth Cone
231(12)
18 Forging a Consensus
243(24)
19 Confrontation in Stockholm
267(12)
20 Modern Revisions of the Neuron Doctrine
279(18)
Comment on Sources 297(2)
References 299(12)
Index 311
Gordon M. Shepherd is Professor of Neurobiology at Yale University School of Medicine. He carries out research on the olfactory pathway as a simple system for the microcircuit organization of the brain. He is a former Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Neurophysiology and Journal of Neuroscience. His books include Handbook of Brain Microcircuits (edited with Sten Grillner) and Creating Modern Neuroscience.